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It's 2 AM and you're still awake. Not because you're not tired — you're exhausted — but because your mind refuses to stop. It's replaying that conversation from three days ago, analyzing what you should have said. It's rehearsing tomorrow's meeting for the hundredth time, inventing problems that probably won't happen. It's circling back to that embarrassing moment from five years ago as if examining it one more time will somehow change it.
This is overthinking — the mental hamster wheel that spins and spins without ever getting anywhere. The exhausting loop of analysis, worry, and rumination that consumes energy without producing solutions. The voice in your head that won't stop narrating, questioning, criticizing, and predicting disasters.
You've probably tried to stop it. "Just don't think about it," people say, as if you could simply flip a switch. You've tried distracting yourself, only to find the thoughts waiting when the distraction ends. You've tried thinking your way out of overthinking, which only adds more thinking to the pile. Nothing seems to work, and the frustration of failing to control your own mind adds another layer to the mental noise.
Here's what most advice about overthinking gets wrong: it treats thoughts as the enemy to be defeated. But you cannot win a war against your own mind. The harder you fight thoughts, the stronger they become. The more you try to suppress them, the more they demand attention. This is why willpower-based approaches to overthinking...
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